Missing Children Feared Victims of Flesh Trade

By Tabibul Islam, InterPress Service, 10 April 2000

DHAKA, Apr 10 (IPS)—The sudden disappearance of 150 children
aged between 10 and 15 years from Kurigram distict, bordering India,
last month, has led to fears that they have been kidnapped for
induction into the international flesh trade.

Although two weeks have passed since the children went missing from in
and around Kurigram town—330 kms west of here—law
enforcement agencies have yet no clue as to their fate.

But many believe there is a good chance that these unfortunate
children, for whom their parents grieve, have been smuggled en masse
to India, Pakistan and the oil-rich Gulf sheikhdoms to be harnessed
into the flesh trade and menial employment.

Never before in Bangladesh have so many children gone missing at the
same time and from the same place. On the other hand trafficking in
women and children has, of late, assumed alarming proportions in
Bangladesh.

With more than 46 percent of the country's 127 million people
living below the poverty line traffickers are taking advantage of the
dehumanising poverty to lure away hundreds of women and children with
false promises of jobs and a secure life abroad.

Traffickers based in India and Pakistan are known to have established
strong networks in the poorer South Asian countries of Bangladesh and
Nepal and use them to easily smuggle them out easily through the
porous borders.

Bangladesh and India have a 4,222 km long common border stretching
over 28 districts of Bangladesh's 64 districts.

The human contraband is assembled in Calcutta, capital of the Indian
state of West Bengal from where they are sold to middlemen who supply
the brothels of India and Pakistan.

Many of the girls are transferred to the Gulf countries by Pakistani
agents. About 80 percent of the boys, girls and women trafficked to
different countries remain untraced, says a report by the Bangladesh
National Women Lawyers Association (BNWLA).

It is estimated that on average 7,000 women and children are
trafficked every year. More than 70,000 women have been smuggled out
of Bangladesh since 1990, the report added.

The report, conducted with assistance from US Agency for International
Development (USAID), focused on 250 frontier villages under six
sub-districts between Oct. 1998 and Oct. 1999. It mentioned that
victims were poor and illiterate.

Divorced women and children from broken families are particularly
vulnerable according to the report.

Upto 27 percent of the female victims were in the 13-16 age group
while another 55 percent were aged between 17 and 24. BNWLA managed
to repatriate 116 women and children from different countries in 1999.

Addressing a regional seminar, Tahmina Hussain, secretary, ministry of
women and children affairs, said tafficking in women and children was
directly linked to many social factors including unemployment,improper
functioning of social organisations, discrimination and poverty.

Since it was not possible for the government alone to combat the
problem there should be closer collaboration among national and
regional organisations in addressing the scourge, she said.

June Kukita, of the UNICEF said trafficking has become a global
problem. The U N agency has been providing funds to a number of
organisations to create awareness against human tafficking, she said.

Bangladesh, being surrounded on all sides by India, must have good
governance in the border areas which is critical to controlling
cross-border trafficking, says Giasuddin Pathan, chief of the
non-governmental organisation (NGO) affairs bureau.

Flesh trade, organ harvesting, and domestic work are the main fields
where the trafficked women and children are being put to expolitative
use, he said.

It is alleged that instead of curbing smuggling of women and children
some members of the law enforcing agencies themselves extend a helping
hand to the traffickers in exchange for a share of the booty.

BNWLA chief Salma Ali emphasises awareness programmes but minces no
word in expressing her dismay over the role of the law enforcing
agencies and has openly accsed them of doing nothing to curb human
tafficking.

BNWLA has put forward a set of 16 recommendations to the government to
end the racket chief among them being the provision

of food for education for vulnerable children and food for work for
vulnerable women.

The constitution of vigilant teams at the grassroot levels comprising
local government representatives, community leaders, teachers and
parents is another important recommendation.

Two months ago Bangladesh enacted tough laws against human trafficking
making the offence punishable by death or a maximum of 20 years
imprisonment—but implementation would depend on good governance
and community participation.

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